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Without journalists many human rights abuses would never be uncovered

In this 60th anniversary year of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Internews and the Every Human Has Rights Campaign would like to acknowledge the great contribution media makes in ensuring the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is upheld by societies.

Competition is open!
Internews is inviting mainstream and citizen journalists from around the world to participate in its Human Rights Media competition by submitting world and current affairs reports that have been published or broadcast after the 15th of September 2007 and which could be used to illustrate one or several articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) in a context that is relevant to the issues facing our world today. Submitted reports will have to explicitly refer to those human rights enshrined in the Universal Declaration.

Read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and illustrate it with your work.

Be creative
60 years later, show how the UDHR is relevant and contemporary by linking it with issues affecting your local audiences or readers and with the hot topics on the international agenda such as climate change, food security and migration.

Deadline for applications:
Applications will be accepted until 15 September 2008, midnight, Paris time.

How to apply:
Read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the competition rules, register for upcoming info on the competition and apply here between August15 and September15, 2008.

http://media-awards.everyhumanhasrights.org/

Course to offer safety tools to working European journalists

European Broadcasting Union (EBU) members, radio and television journalists as well as cameramen may enroll in a program to help journalists deal with stress from September 15 to 19 in Munich, Germany.

The course, the Hostile Environment Safety Training program, will address the work of journalists in hostile environments and aims to help them recognize their strengths and weaknesses.

Participants will learn essential skills and tools for dealing with stress, keeping safe and healthy as well as preventing danger.

The safety program was established by EBU International Training in 2004 to address the importance of safety in conflict zones.

For more information about the training program, visit http://www.ebu.ch/en/hr_training/training/journalism/next_courses/2008_courses/09_hest.php.

http://www.ijnet.org/Director.aspx?P=Article&ID=307992&LID=1

Article aims to help journalists cover climate change

An article published in the U.S. magazine Columbia Journalism Review and available online aims to provide journalists with guidance on how to “sharpen” their coverage of climate change.

According to the article’s author, science journalist Christine Russell, coverage of climate change “will grow in significance on a number of … international fronts” in 2009. Thus the article provides tips on: how to relate weather patterns and climate change; covering technological developments; choosing experts; covering policy; reporting on China; reporting the economics of climate change; and more.

Russell also provides a starter set of possible stories for reporters to consider when covering climate change in the future. And the online article includes a Web exclusive sidebar, with Web sites and online resources journalists can consult when writing about climate change.

To view the article, go to http://www.cjr.org/feature/climate_change_now_what.php

http://www.ijnet.org/Director.aspx?P=Article&ID=307972&LID=1

Correspondent was refused passage to a public meeting

Mirzojalol Shojamalov, correspondent of the Radio Liberty Persian service was stopped by Tajik national security servicemen at the airport in Khorog, administrative center of Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Province. The journalist was going to attend a public meeting on 18 July, on the occasion of the visit of Emomali Rakhmon, Tajik President.

The journalist had his accreditation card and official permission to attend public meetings and cover the President’s visit in the media. However, the national security officers did not allow the correspondent to attend the first meeting of the President with public officials in the province, explaining that “the journalist represents a foreign medium”.

The management of Radio Liberty interprets these actions of the GBAO security services as limitation of journalist’s rights. Radio Liberty expressed concern about this fact.

NANSMIT monitoring service

Neo-censorship symposium to be held in Amsterdam

An International Symposium on Neo-censorship will take place from September 18 to 20 in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

According to organizers, neo-censorship refers to a type of censorship that is not imposed by any state authority but by private parties. This type of censorship is increasing, they say, with “growing threats to the freedom of expression and the free dissemination of ideas and texts, which are being kept on a tight rein or even deterred by censorship-like phenomena.”

Journalists from all over the world are invited to join authors, publishers, librarians and booksellers at the event, which will examine the erosion of free expression on an international level. It is being hosted by the Board of Amsterdam World Book Capital, in collaboration with Index on Censorship and Amnesty International.

For additional information and to register, visit http://www.amsterdamworldbookcapital.com or http://www.amsterdamworldbookcapital.com/index.cfm?page=Neo-censorship%20symposium

http://www.ijnet.org/Director.aspx?P=Article&ID=307984&LID=1

Work on the code of professional ethics continues

On 18 July, in Dushanbe, the Tajik public organization “Ittilot va Muoshirat” conducted a round table to discuss a new draft code of professional ethics for journalists.

Discussing the new draft code’s provisions, participants of the meting came to the conclusion that the document is far from perfect and should be further developed. This assignment was given to a special working group comprising competent journalists and public figures.

Abdusattor Nuraliev, chair of the department of history and theory of journalism at the Tajik-Russian Slavic University stressed that the new code will become a regulator and an orienting point for journalists in their profession.

www.khovar.tj

IFC conducted a workshop on corporative management

International Financial Corporation (IFC) conducted a new round of training for journalists on the topic of corporative management.

IFC invited an independent economic expert, president of the Kazakh Center of Entrepreneurial Journalism, Tulegen Askarov. His mission was to present the principles of public management existing in Central Asia to Tajik journalists covering various economic developments. Among participants of the workshop organized by IFC were not only writing journalists, but also representatives of the government entities’ press services, leading banks, private companies involved in international practices of corporative management.

www.khovar.tj

Media21 Global Journalism Network Fellowships

The Media21 Global Journalism Network is seeking applications for its next Global Issues media workshop (Nov. 24-Dec. 7, 2008), this time on the challenges of migration in the 21st century.

The first part will take place in Geneva, Switzerland (three days) with expert panels involving key organizations such as IOM, UNHCR, ICRC, MSF, World Economic Forum etc. on diverse aspects of migration, refugees and trafficking affecting host regions such as Europe or North America but also source countries ranging from Mali and Salvador to Afghanistan. This will be followed by three days in Andorra as part of the 3rd Future of Europe Summit providing access to lead European and other international business, academic, NGO and policy representatives. Participating journalists have the option to take part in a week-long field trip either to northern/western Africa or eastern/central Europe.

Deadline for the Migration I Workshop: October 15, 2008. Costs: 5,400 Euros covering all travel, food & lodging, field trip and tuition. Limited grants are available.

The purpose of this unique programme is to provide experienced local and international editors, reporters and producers with a broader perspective of global issues: peacekeeping & peacebuilding; health; climate change, human rights; world trade…It seeks to promote more informed debate by putting journalists from around the world in touch with key players. Media21 works closely with diverse partners and facilitates interactive sessions with the international aid community, private sector, civil society, governments, military, academia, media… It also organizes practically-oriented trips enabling journalists to report first-hand from the field.

Applicants must demonstrate a serious interest and a firm record of journalistic achievement. The workshops are open to journalists with a minimum of three years’ experience, though priority will be given to mid-career and senior journalists. Participants are expected to produce two reports (articles, broadcasts blogs etc.) for their own media and to make these available to the Media21 website. (http://www.media21geneva.org) As Media21 alumni, they are also invited to participate actively in the Global Journalism Network by sharing experiences, contacts and reporting.

For more information, please contact: Daniel Wermus at dwermus@infosud.org or go to http://www.media21geneva.org.

IJNET

Tajik Public, Press Break Decade Of Silence

When an influential brother-in-law of President Emomali Rahmon mysteriously disappeared in April, the ensuing media coverage surprised many Tajiks.

It was notable because speculation mounted that Hasan Sadulloev had been murdered.

But it was more remarkable for its sheer volume, since such topics have long been taboo under the watchful eyes of the Rahmon administration.

Rahmon might not garner the headlines of Central Asia’s most conspicuous enemies of the free press, but Tajik authorities’ fierce defense of the president and his image have left little room for genuine public scrutiny of Rahmon, his policies, or his family.

Throughout much of the past decade, ordinary Tajiks have rarely voiced frustration with the government or head of state in the form of public protests. Demonstrations have been almost unheard of despite widespread poverty, rampant unemployment, and corruption.

Journalists who chose to challenge the country’s leaders have faced serious retaliation — in the form of beatings, firings, or closures of their publications.

But several protests have been held recently in the capital, Dushanbe, as well as in cities like Kulob, Panjakent, and Khorog. In one case, the appointment of a local official prompted a rally.

«People are not afraid of the government’s retaliation anymore,» says 22-year-old Safar, from the eastern Badakhshan region. «What else can happen to us? With a university diploma in my pocket, I have to work like a slave in Russia, because I don’t have any — literally any — job opportunities in Tajikistan. The situation can’t possibly get any worse than this.»

The attitudes of many Tajiks appear to have shifted recently, with skyrocketing food prices and energy shortages that left people freezing to death in their homes during the coldest winter in living memory.

«People have to demand their rights through lawful ways,» Safar says, «and this is the only way out of the situation for us.»

Such refrains evoke a familiar Tajik expression that «there is no color darker than black.»

Years Of Silence

Some observers ascribe citizens’ apparent reluctance to speak out critically to caution in light of the fact that Tajiks took to the streets in the early 1990s to change the political system in protests that helped spark a bloody five-year civil war.

That theory appeared to hold true for several years after peace was established in 1997, as Rahmon dominated one set of flawed elections after another. At the same time, presidential friends and relatives took over many of country’s major businesses, while an estimated 1 million people — one-sixth of the country’s population — chose to migrate to Russia for work to support their families.

Rahmatullo Valiev, the deputy head of Tajikistan’s Democratic Party, tells RFE/RL that he believes Tajiks have had enough and realize that they no longer have anything to lose by protesting.

«People are tired of this situation, and the general impression is that the government is not capable of doing anything for them,» Valiev says. «People take to the streets to demand their rights, saying they want a better life, better salaries, and so on.»

Journalists and commentators have joined the chorus of public expressions of unhappiness with Rahmon and other government officials.

A commentary in the weekly «Nigoh» last month accused the government and the president’s office of «favoring certain groups» and thus compounding the problem. «Managerial and other key positions are only given to wealthy people with connections, and it adds to people’s dissatisfaction and their distrust of the government,» «Nigoh» charged.

Many Tajiks complain that not only does the government appear incapable of creating jobs, corrupt government employees prevent people who want to set up businesses from creating new sources of income.

The weekly «Farazh» in June quoted the leader of the Social Democrat Party, Rahmatullo Zoirov, as claiming that «Tajikistan has never before been in such deep crisis.» He added, «There is not any improvement in Tajikistan and the government offices do not carry out their duties.»

Farangis Najibullah, Radio Free Europe

Источник: http://www.rferl.org/content/Tajik_Public_Press_Break_Decade_Silence/1183846.html

One World Fellowship for senior radio, TV broadcasters

Senior radio and television broadcasters from developing countries can apply to enter the 13th One World Fellowship Scheme program, which will bring media professionals to the UK from October 20 to 31. The deadline to apply is August 22.

The program will allow participants to contribute ideas in discussion groups as well as develop new goals and relationships with other professionals.

The fellowship will cover the chosen applicants’ international travel and accommodation expenses during the program, as well as daily travel allowance.

Applicants must be fluent in written and spoken English.

For more information, visit http://www.owbt.org/pages/Fellowships/apply.html.

http://www.ijnet.org/Director.aspx?P=Article&ID=307952&LID=1